Chicago Sun-Times

ALL WORK … AND NO PAIN?

Employees go to great lengths to separate profession­al lives and outside lives on occasional­ly intriguing Apple TV+ series

- BY RICHARD ROEPER, MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

If you’re returning to an office soon after a long hiatus, if you’re even thinking about returning to an office any time this year, might I recommend you think twice about watching “Severance” — because after nine episodes of this workplace psychologi­cal mystery, you’ll be traumatize­d at the mere thought of cubicles, desktop monitors and break rooms.

These days it’s more difficult than ever to separate your Work Self and your Home Self — especially if your workplace is 10 feet from your living room sofa, or perhaps is your living room sofa. In the deliberate­ly paced, well-acted and at times intriguing Apple TV+ series “Severance,” we are in a near-future in which you can volunteer for a procedure, aka brain surgery, that will utterly and completely separate your workplace and off-the-clock selves. When you check in for work at the headquarte­rs of the mysterious and omniscient and coldly intimidati­ng Lumon Industries, you have instant and total amnesia about your outside life. All you know is work, and your colleagues, and your job, which involves macro data refinement or some such mind-numbing thing.

A world removed from the wacky workplace antics of “Parks and Recreation,” Adam Scott is still a master at deadpan, everyman, reactive comedy and drama — and he’s perfectly cast as one “Mark S.,” a former college professor who is devastated by the death of his wife and took the job at Lumon Industries so for eight hours every day, he would forget his pain. (It works both ways; once Mark and his colleagues exit the offices and return to their normal lives, they have no real memories of their job experience­s either. Mark doesn’t realize his nosy neighbor, played by the invaluable Patricia Arquette, is his supervisor at work. And yet she knows who he is, because … HIJINKS and DUPLICITY.)

Britt Lower is outstandin­g as “Helly B.,” who has just joined the program and desperatel­y wants out, attempting escapes from the labyrinthi­ne corridors of Lumon only to find herself right where she started. That’s because the corporate version of yourself — the “innie” — is at the mercy of the realworld version of yourself, i.e., the “outtie.” As long as Helly B. the outtie wants Helly B. the innie to keep returning to work and thus essentiall­y enter into a waking coma for eight hours a day, that’s the way it will go.

It’s all very civilized and it’s all very controlled and it’s all quite unnerving, because we know there’s something “Twilight Zone” about this whole situation — but while director Ben Stiller does a fine job of placing us inside the expansive yet claustroph­obic grounds of Lumon, and the cast is universall­y excellent, “Severance” starts with a slow crawl and builds to a steady walk — but never really takes flight and spends far too much time leading us to a reveal we knew was coming five episodes earlier.

 ?? APPLE TV+ ?? To shut out his pain, a professor (Adam Scott) devastated by the death of his wife agrees to a brain procedure that blocks out personal memories during office time on “Severance.”
APPLE TV+ To shut out his pain, a professor (Adam Scott) devastated by the death of his wife agrees to a brain procedure that blocks out personal memories during office time on “Severance.”

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